One person’s trash is Kate Sheehy’s treasure–and a treat for anyone who likes their puppetry and performance art compelling, fresh, and homemade. Sheehy curated “The Junk Show” at Link’s Hall and conceived and directed the festival’s signature piece, Junk Farm, an episodic parable of urban sprawl, deforestation, depersonalization, and exploitation featuring miniature shadow puppets, found […]
Author Archives: Kerry Reid
Need
NEED, Half Cocked Productions, at the Space. Writer-director Arik Martin’s new black comedy reminds me a lot of Quentin Tarantino–before he began taking himself too seriously and became a bloated celebrity-machine joke. Some of Martin’s staging of this tale about hoodlums, junkies, and just plain weirdos recalls classic Tarantino setups. But what really makes the […]
Theater People: Bryn Magnus teaches kids to produce
Five teenagers slouch on the furniture in the Pulaski Park field house, gossiping, joking, and talking about getting some junk food to ease the late afternoon munchies. Kelley Minneci shares her news: she just found out she’s been accepted into the acting pro-gram at NYU. Congratulations are offered all around. And then it’s down to […]
Night Visions
NIGHT VISIONS, Flush Puppy Productions, at Heaven Gallery, through April 21. The landscape of dreams is the thin unifying thread for this second festival from Flush Puppy Productions (their first, “Gonads,” was on the theme of sex). Four playlets and one song examine subconscious states and daydreams. The turgid, repetitive films in Matthew Osmon’s Nocturnal […]
Men and Monsters
The Action Against Sol Schumann Victory Gardens Theater By Kerry Reid David Horowitz’s name doesn’t come up once in Jeffrey Sweet’s taut, moving, intelligent play. But in the difficult issues Sweet raises I felt the weighty presence of this vociferous and controversial opponent of slave reparations. How do we forgive the unforgivable? More to the […]
Each in His Own Way
EACH IN HIS OWN WAY, TinFish Theatre. “Life,” Thomas Hardy observed, “is a series of seemings.” In Luigi Pirandello’s 1924 comedy, the serial seemings come fast and furious, inside out and upside down. Dragan Torbica directs a solid revival of this absurdist version of a revenger’s tragedy: a beautiful but fickle actress inspires infidelity, suicide, […]
Journey to the Center of the Journey
JOURNEY TO THE CENTER OF THE JOURNEY, at Second City, Donny’s Skybox Studio. A couple of things make this musical sketch-comedy show distinctive: the large cast of 15 and the fact that some of these folks can really belt. But despite some standout numbers, most of the material feels tired: a Telemundo sketch, a takeoff […]
Between Doors
BETWEEN DOORS, Ravenous Productions, at the Athenaeum Theatre, through March 24. This trio of pieces curated by Joseph Ravens focuses on identity, transience, and stasis, with limited success. In the title piece, inspired in part by Charles Ludlam’s The Mystery of Irma Vep, Ravens creates a challenging premise and set for his cast of five. […]
Short Sharp Shocks
Sketchbook ‘One CollaborAction Theatre Company at the Viaduct Theater By Kerry Reid CollaborAction Theatre Com-pany describes its second annual festival of short plays as “a progressive mixed-media theatrical bazaar.” That’s just the sort of verbiage that makes me fear a theatrical cocktail made up of one part incoherence and two parts pretension, served with a […]
Saint Joan of the Stockyards
SAINT JOAN OF THE STOCKYARDS, Prop Theatre Group, at Bailiwick Repertory. Bertolt Brecht’s transmutation of the Maid of Orleans’ struggle to the harsh underbelly of Chicago’s meatpacking industry in 1904 receives a thoughtful but occasionally stilted revival for Prop’s 20th anniversary. Adapter Stefan Brun directs an intelligent cast, including Jenny Magnus as a fiery Joan […]
Nelson Algren: For Keeps and a Single Day
NELSON ALGREN: FOR KEEPS AND A SINGLE DAY, Lookingglass Theatre Company, at the Ruth Page Center for the Arts. Adapter-director-filmmaker John Musial’s unconditional love of Nelson Algren and deft understanding of the writer’s thorny relationship with Chicago drive this jazz-infused collage of 12 Algren pieces. Thom Cox brings an understated ruefulness to the narration, and […]
Afraid of the Dark
Jennie Richee Ridge Theater at the Museum of Contemporary Art By Kerry Reid Henry Darger, a Chicago custodian who died in 1973 at the age of 81, led a life shrouded in secrecy and obsession, his psyche a battlefield of conflicting forces that drove him to write and illustrate Realms of the Unreal–at some 15,000 […]